Contamination risk increases as food chain goes global

April 24, 2013 00:00
By Nayan Chanda
YaleGlobal
New

"Waiter, there's a horse in my soup!" For European consumers who enjoy the convenience of frozen pre-cooked meals like lasagna, this is no longer an unsavoury joke. Europeans are angry about globalisation and suspicious of its products. Along with hors

The scandal erupted in mid-January when British food inspectors discovered horse DNA in packages of beef lasagna marketed by Findus Group, headquartered in Britain. Initial investigations unravelled a spaghetti-like supply chain linking at least five European countries that had managed to re-label the less expensive horsemeat as beef: Findus placed orders for lasagna, cannelloni, spaghetti bolognaise and moussaka at a Luxembourg-based French company, Comigel, which had contracted with the French processing company Spanghero to source beef. The contract went to a Dutch trader based in Cyprus. The Cypriot company in turn outsourced the order to a Dutch company, which subcontracted another company. The order ultimately landed with a Romanian abattoir that supplied minced meat to Spanghero. According to Benoit Hamon, the French deputy minister in charge of consumer affairs, Spanghero mislabelled Romanian horsemeat as beef. By substituting horsemeat for beef, Hamon said, Spanghero may have made a 550,000-euro profit.

Since this chance discovery of mislabelling in Findus lasagna, more cases have been exposed – an Irish company sold mislabelled Polish horsemeat, and several UK companies have marketed horsemeat as beef burgers and kebabs. By the latest account, some 750 tonnes of horsemeat have gone into 13 European countries, of which 550 tonnes were used in the manufacture of more than 4.5 million meals. According to the French minister, fraudulent sales of horsemeat had been going on for months.

UK government testing has shown that little over 1 per cent of declared beef products were horsemeat – enough to have shaken consumer confidence in pre-cooked supermarket meals. Supermarkets have withdrawn products suspected of containing horsemeat.

From being a straightforward case of mislabelling or fraud, the scandal took a more ominous turn when the UK’s Food Standards Agency said phenylbutazone, a drug potentially harmful to human health, was identified in carcasses of horses, some of which were exported to France. There’s no taboo attached to horsemeat in Europe; restaurants put it on menus and serve it to customers. And although the British government’s chief medical officer has discounted the risk of ingesting a dose that could be harmful to humans, the revelations have left a bitter taste with consumers. If horsemeat was sold under the label of “100 per cent pure beef”, what else have consumers been fed that’s yet to be revealed?

The horsemeat scandal has highlighted a dark side of the globalised economy. The 2008 global financial crisis that encompassed the European Union triggered a deep economic recession that affected all aspects of life. Many horse owners, fallen on hard times, abandoned their animals. Instead of incurring the costs of euthanising them, owners sent the animals to abattoirs to bring in needed cash. In Ireland, the European country with the largest concentration of horses, some 25,000 were sent to slaughterhouses in 2012.

The economic crisis accounts for a tenfold increase in the slaughter of horses during the past four years, resulting in a sharp drop in the price of horsemeat. On the other side of the continent, the 2007 Romanian ban on horse-drawn carriages on highways had a similar effect, accelerating the slaughter of horses. Leaner horsemeat, which costs half the price of beef, found its way into the food chain.

Globalisation of prepared food, increasingly popular for working-class families looking for fast and affordable meals, has for its part stepped up the pressure on primary suppliers. Companies like Findus and Spanghero, trying to supply supermarkets with ever-cheaper packaged food, have attempted to secure profit margins by squeezing farmers and suppliers down the line. Unlike high-end organic food, sources of which can be traced to the growers, frozen foods intended for poorer consumers have been produced with limited supervision and control. Industry resists quality control, as that costs money. The inevitable result has been cutting corners and perhaps even fraud.

Consumers, schoolchildren and hospital patients are not the only victims of the supply-chain failure; 320 workers of Spanghero were laid off as the government suspended its license, pending investigation of the company’s role in the mislabelling. The suspension order is a “death sentence” for residents of Castelnaudary, where one is either employed by Spanghero or probably not employed at all. The small town is situated in France’s third poorest region, where the unemployment rate stands at 13.5 per cent. Whether the executives are found guilty or not, the future of that company, or for that matter, distributors like Findus, looks grim.

In this hyper-connected age, the bad reputation of a supplier spreads at the speed of light, and it could take the company involved years to recover. In 1990 there was a scandal involving benzene found in a few bottles of French-produced Perrier. Despite the decision to withdraw its entire worldwide stock of 160 million bottles, the company’s image was gravely damaged. It took Perrier 15 years to recover its transatlantic market share.

The horsemeat scandal has exposed, once again, the risks of long and complex supply chains involving dozens or more suppliers, where the search for a better price results in careless quality control. The French newspaper Le Monde calls the horsemeat scandal the “Pasta sub-prime”, a comparison that recalls the disastrous bundled debt containing toxic US sub-prime assets that brought global financial markets to the verge of collapse. Comparing fraudulent use of mislabelled food that affects a sliver of the market to the sub-prime fraud may be excessive, but it raises legitimate issues of supervising a closely integrated market for the wellbeing of all consumers.

As bankers and rating agencies allowed sub-prime mortgages of questionable value to be bundled for their private gains, some in the frozen food supply chain have done the same. To ensure their own profit, one of the links in the long supply chain was contaminated, leading to the collapse of the entire chain. Similar failures have occurred repeatedly, as in the case of China’s melamine-tainted formula for babies in 2008, causing death and injury.

Given the complexity of production systems with components criss-crossing international borders and increasing pressure for cost-cutting, the need for supervision is greater than ever. Unless local authorities take on a greater responsibility to ensure safety and hygiene of ingredients and components produced for global consumption, the economy and workers will suffer as much as consumers beyond local borders. Packaged foods in the supermarket shelf may be global, but the responsibility for consumer safety everywhere is ultimately local.

Nayan Chanda is editor of YaleGlobal Online and co-editor of “A World Connected: Globalisation in the 21st Century”.

Yale Centre for the study of globalisation.

Since this chance discovery of mislabelling in Findus lasagna, more cases have been exposed – an Irish company sold mislabelled Polish horsemeat, and several UK companies have marketed horsemeat as beef burgers and kebabs. By the latest account, some 750 tonnes of horsemeat have gone into 13 European countries, of which 550 tonnes were used in the manufacture of more than 4.5 million meals. According to the French minister, fraudulent sales of horsemeat had been going on for months.

UK government testing has shown that little over 1 per cent of declared beef products were horsemeat – enough to have shaken consumer confidence in pre-cooked supermarket meals. Supermarkets have withdrawn products suspected of containing horsemeat.

From being a straightforward case of mislabelling or fraud, the scandal took a more ominous turn when the UK’s Food Standards Agency said phenylbutazone, a drug potentially harmful to human health, was identified in carcasses of horses, some of which were exported to France. There’s no taboo attached to horsemeat in Europe; restaurants put it on menus and serve it to customers. And although the British government’s chief medical officer has discounted the risk of ingesting a dose that could be harmful to humans, the revelations have left a bitter taste with consumers. If horsemeat was sold under the label of “100 per cent pure beef”, what else have consumers been fed that’s yet to be revealed?

The horsemeat scandal has highlighted a dark side of the globalised economy. The 2008 global financial crisis that encompassed the European Union triggered a deep economic recession that affected all aspects of life. Many horse owners, fallen on hard times, abandoned their animals. Instead of incurring the costs of euthanising them, owners sent the animals to abattoirs to bring in needed cash. In Ireland, the European country with the largest concentration of horses, some 25,000 were sent to slaughterhouses in 2012.

The economic crisis accounts for a tenfold increase in the slaughter of horses during the past four years, resulting in a sharp drop in the price of horsemeat. On the other side of the continent, the 2007 Romanian ban on horse-drawn carriages on highways had a similar effect, accelerating the slaughter of horses. Leaner horsemeat, which costs half the price of beef, found its way into the food chain.

Globalisation of prepared food, increasingly popular for working-class families looking for fast and affordable meals, has for its part stepped up the pressure on primary suppliers. Companies like Findus and Spanghero, trying to supply supermarkets with ever-cheaper packaged food, have attempted to secure profit margins by squeezing farmers and suppliers down the line. Unlike high-end organic food, sources of which can be traced to the growers, frozen foods intended for poorer consumers have been produced with limited supervision and control. Industry resists quality control, as that costs money. The inevitable result has been cutting corners and perhaps even fraud.

Consumers, schoolchildren and hospital patients are not the only victims of the supply-chain failure; 320 workers of Spanghero were laid off as the government suspended its license, pending investigation of the company’s role in the mislabelling. The suspension order is a “death sentence” for residents of Castelnaudary, where one is either employed by Spanghero or probably not employed at all. The small town is situated in France’s third poorest region, where the unemployment rate stands at 13.5 per cent. Whether the executives are found guilty or not, the future of that company, or for that matter, distributors like Findus, looks grim.

In this hyper-connected age, the bad reputation of a supplier spreads at the speed of light, and it could take the company involved years to recover. In 1990 there was a scandal involving benzene found in a few bottles of French-produced Perrier. Despite the decision to withdraw its entire worldwide stock of 160 million bottles, the company’s image was gravely damaged. It took Perrier 15 years to recover its transatlantic market share.

The horsemeat scandal has exposed, once again, the risks of long and complex supply chains involving dozens or more suppliers, where the search for a better price results in careless quality control. The French newspaper Le Monde calls the horsemeat scandal the “Pasta sub-prime”, a comparison that recalls the disastrous bundled debt containing toxic US sub-prime assets that brought global financial markets to the verge of collapse. Comparing fraudulent use of mislabelled food that affects a sliver of the market to the sub-prime fraud may be excessive, but it raises legitimate issues of supervising a closely integrated market for the wellbeing of all consumers.

As bankers and rating agencies allowed sub-prime mortgages of questionable value to be bundled for their private gains, some in the frozen food supply chain have done the same. To ensure their own profit, one of the links in the long supply chain was contaminated, leading to the collapse of the entire chain. Similar failures have occurred repeatedly, as in the case of China’s melamine-tainted formula for babies in 2008, causing death and injury.

Given the complexity of production systems with components criss-crossing international borders and increasing pressure for cost-cutting, the need for supervision is greater than ever. Unless local authorities take on a greater responsibility to ensure safety and hygiene of ingredients and components produced for global consumption, the economy and workers will suffer as much as consumers beyond local borders. Packaged foods in the supermarket shelf may be global, but the responsibility for consumer safety everywhere is ultimately local.

Nayan Chanda is editor of YaleGlobal Online and co-editor of “A World Connected: Globalisation in the 21st Century”.